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DATA MINING LECTURE 10

DATA MINING LECTURE 10. Classification Basic Concepts Decision Trees. Catching tax-evasion. Tax-return data for year 2011. A new tax return for 2012 Is this a cheating tax return?.

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DATA MINING LECTURE 10

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  1. DATA MININGLECTURE 10 Classification Basic Concepts Decision Trees

  2. Catching tax-evasion Tax-return data for year 2011 A new tax return for 2012 Is this a cheating tax return? An instance of the classification problem: learn a method for discriminating between records of different classes (cheaters vsnon-cheaters)

  3. categorical categorical continuous class What is classification? • Classification is the task of learning a target functionf that maps attribute set x to one of the predefined class labels y One of the attributes is the class attribute In this case: Cheat Two class labels (or classes): Yes (1), No (0)

  4. Why classification? • The target function f is known as a classification model • Descriptive modeling: Explanatory tool to distinguish between objects of different classes (e.g., understand why people cheat on their taxes) • Predictive modeling: Predict a class of a previously unseen record

  5. Examples of Classification Tasks • Predicting tumor cells as benign or malignant • Classifying credit card transactionsas legitimate or fraudulent • Categorizing news stories as finance, weather, entertainment, sports, etc • Identifying spamemail, spam web pages, adultcontent • Understanding if a web query has commercial intent or not

  6. General approach to classification • Training set consists of records with known class labels • Training set is used to build a classification model • A labeledtest set of previously unseen data records is used to evaluate the quality of the model. • The classification model is applied to new records with unknown class labels

  7. Illustrating Classification Task

  8. Evaluation of classification models • Counts of test records that are correctly (or incorrectly) predicted by the classification model • Confusion matrix Predicted Class Actual Class

  9. Classification Techniques • Decision Tree based Methods • Rule-based Methods • Memory based reasoning • Neural Networks • Naïve Bayes and Bayesian Belief Networks • Support Vector Machines

  10. Classification Techniques • Decision Tree based Methods • Rule-based Methods • Memory based reasoning • Neural Networks • Naïve Bayes and Bayesian Belief Networks • Support Vector Machines

  11. Decision Trees • Decision tree • A flow-chart-like tree structure • Internal node denotes a test on an attribute • Branch represents an outcome of the test • Leaf nodes represent class labels or class distribution

  12. categorical categorical continuous class Example of a Decision Tree Splitting Attributes Refund Yes No Test outcome NO MarSt Married Single, Divorced TaxInc NO < 80K > 80K YES NO Class labels Model: Decision Tree Training Data

  13. NO Another Example of Decision Tree categorical categorical continuous class Single, Divorced MarSt Married NO Refund No Yes TaxInc < 80K > 80K YES NO There could be more than one tree that fits the same data!

  14. Decision Tree Classification Task Decision Tree

  15. Refund Yes No NO MarSt Married Single, Divorced TaxInc NO < 80K > 80K YES NO Apply Model to Test Data Test Data Start from the root of tree.

  16. Refund Yes No NO MarSt Married Single, Divorced TaxInc NO < 80K > 80K YES NO Apply Model to Test Data Test Data

  17. Apply Model to Test Data Test Data Refund Yes No NO MarSt Married Single, Divorced TaxInc NO < 80K > 80K YES NO

  18. Apply Model to Test Data Test Data Refund Yes No NO MarSt Married Single, Divorced TaxInc NO < 80K > 80K YES NO

  19. Apply Model to Test Data Test Data Refund Yes No NO MarSt Married Single, Divorced TaxInc NO < 80K > 80K YES NO

  20. Apply Model to Test Data Test Data Refund Yes No NO MarSt Assign Cheat to “No” Married Single, Divorced TaxInc NO < 80K > 80K YES NO

  21. Decision Tree Classification Task Decision Tree

  22. Tree Induction • Finding the best decision tree is NP-hard • Greedystrategy. • Split the records based on an attribute test that optimizes certain criterion. • Many Algorithms: • Hunt’s Algorithm (one of the earliest) • CART • ID3, C4.5 • SLIQ,SPRINT

  23. General Structure of Hunt’s Algorithm • Let Dtbe the set of training records that reach a node t • General Procedure: • If Dt contains records that belong the same class yt, then t is a leaf node labeled as yt • If Dt contains records with the same attribute values, then t is a leaf node labeled with the majorityclass yt • If Dt is an empty set, then t is a leaf node labeled by the default class, yd • If Dt contains records that belong to more than one class, use an attribute test to split the data into smaller subsets. • Recursively apply the procedure to each subset. Dt ?

  24. Refund Refund Yes No Yes No Don’t Cheat Marital Status Don’t Cheat Marital Status Single, Divorced Refund Married Married Single, Divorced Yes No Don’t Cheat Taxable Income Cheat Don’t Cheat Don’t Cheat Don’t Cheat < 80K >= 80K Don’t Cheat Cheat Hunt’s Algorithm Don’t Cheat

  25. Constructing decision-trees (pseudocode) GenDecTree(Sample S, Features F) • If stopping_condition(S,F) = true then • leaf = createNode() • leaf.label= Classify(S) • return leaf • root =createNode() • root.test_condition = findBestSplit(S,F) • V = {v| v a possible outcome of root.test_condition} • foreach value vєV: • Sv: = {s | root.test_condition(s) = v and s є S}; • child = GenDecTree(Sv ,F) ; • Add child as a descent of root and label the edge (rootchild) as v • return root

  26. Tree Induction • Issues • How to Classify a leaf node • Assign the majority class • If leaf is empty, assign the default class – the class that has the highest popularity. • Determine how to split the records • How to specify the attribute test condition? • How to determine the best split? • Determine when to stop splitting

  27. How to Specify Test Condition? • Depends on attribute types • Nominal • Ordinal • Continuous • Depends on number of ways to split • 2-way split • Multi-way split

  28. CarType Family Luxury Sports CarType CarType {Sports, Luxury} {Family, Luxury} {Family} {Sports} Splitting Based on Nominal Attributes • Multi-way split: Use as many partitions as distinct values. • Binary split: Divides values into two subsets. Need to find optimal partitioning. OR

  29. Size Small Large Medium Size Size Size {Small, Medium} {Small, Large} {Medium, Large} {Medium} {Large} {Small} Splitting Based on Ordinal Attributes • Multi-way split: Use as many partitions as distinct values. • Binary split: Divides values into two subsets – respects the order. Need to find optimal partitioning. • What about this split? OR

  30. Splitting Based on Continuous Attributes • Different ways of handling • Discretization to form an ordinal categorical attribute • Static – discretize once at the beginning • Dynamic – ranges can be found by equal interval bucketing, equal frequency bucketing (percentiles), or clustering. • Binary Decision: (A < v) or (A  v) • consider all possible splits and finds the best cut • can be more compute intensive

  31. Splitting Based on Continuous Attributes

  32. How to determine the Best Split Before Splitting: 10 records of class 0, 10 records of class 1 Which test condition is the best?

  33. How to determine the Best Split • Greedy approach: • Nodes with homogeneous class distribution are preferred • Need a measure of node impurity: • Ideas? Non-homogeneous, High degree of impurity Homogeneous, Low degree of impurity

  34. Measuring Node Impurity • p(i|t): fraction of records associated with node t belonging to class i • Used in ID3 and C4.5 • Used in CART, SLIQ, SPRINT.

  35. Gain • Gain of an attribute split: compare the impurity of the parent node with the average impurity of the child nodes • Maximizing the gain Minimizing the weighted average impurity measure of children nodes • If I() = Entropy(), then Δinfois called information gain

  36. Example P(C1) = 0/6 = 0 P(C2) = 6/6 = 1 Gini= 1 – P(C1)2 – P(C2)2 = 1 – 0 – 1 = 0 Entropy = – 0 log 0– 1 log 1 = – 0 – 0 = 0 Error = 1 – max (0, 1) = 1 – 1 = 0 P(C1) = 1/6 P(C2) = 5/6 Gini= 1 – (1/6)2 – (5/6)2 = 0.278 Entropy = – (1/6) log2 (1/6)– (5/6) log2 (1/6) = 0.65 Error = 1 – max (1/6, 5/6) = 1 – 5/6 = 1/6 P(C1) = 2/6 P(C2) = 4/6 Gini= 1 – (2/6)2 – (4/6)2 = 0.444 Entropy = – (2/6) log2 (2/6)– (4/6) log2 (4/6) = 0.92 Error = 1 – max (2/6, 4/6) = 1 – 4/6 = 1/3

  37. Impurity measures • All of the impurity measures take value zero (minimum) for the case of a pure node where a single value has probability 1 • All of the impurity measures take maximum value when the class distribution in a node is uniform.

  38. Comparison among Splitting Criteria For a 2-class problem: The different impurity measures are consistent

  39. Categorical Attributes • For binary values split in two • For multivalued attributes, for each distinct value, gather counts for each class in the dataset • Use the count matrix to make decisions Multi-way split Two-way split (find best partition of values)

  40. Continuous Attributes • Use Binary Decisions based on one value • Choices for the splitting value • Number of possible splitting values = Number of distinct values • Each splitting value has a count matrix associated with it • Class counts in each of the partitions, A < v and A  v • Exhaustive method to choose best v • For each v, scan the database to gather count matrix and compute the impurity index • Computationally Inefficient! Repetition of work.

  41. Sorted Values Split Positions Continuous Attributes • For efficient computation: for each attribute, • Sort the attribute on values • Linearly scan these values, each time updating the count matrix and computing impurity • Choose the split position that has the least impurity

  42. Splitting based on impurity • Impurity measures favor attributes with large number of values • A test condition with large number of outcomes may not be desirable • # of records in each partition is too small to make predictions

  43. Splitting based on INFO

  44. Gain Ratio • Splitting using information gain Parent Node, p is split into k partitions ni is the number of records in partition i • Adjusts Information Gain by the entropy of the partitioning (SplitINFO). Higher entropy partitioning (large number of small partitions) is penalized! • Used in C4.5 • Designed to overcome the disadvantage of impurity

  45. Stopping Criteria for Tree Induction • Stop expanding a node when all the records belong to the same class • Stop expanding a node when all the records have similar attribute values • Early termination (to be discussed later)

  46. Decision Tree Based Classification • Advantages: • Inexpensive to construct • Extremely fast at classifying unknown records • Easy to interpret for small-sized trees • Accuracy is comparable to other classification techniques for many simple data sets

  47. Example: C4.5 • Simple depth-first construction. • Uses Information Gain • Sorts Continuous Attributes at each node. • Needs entire data to fit in memory. • Unsuitable for Large Datasets. • Needs out-of-core sorting. • You can download the software from:http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~quinlan/c4.5r8.tar.gz

  48. Other Issues • Data Fragmentation • Expressiveness

  49. Data Fragmentation • Number of instances gets smaller as you traverse down the tree • Number of instances at the leaf nodes could be too small to make any statistically significant decision • You can introduce a lower bound on the number of items per leaf node in the stopping criterion.

  50. Expressiveness • A classifier defines a function that discriminates between two (or more) classes. • The expressiveness of a classifier is the class of functions that it can model, and the kind of data that it can separate • When we have discrete (or binary) values, we are interested in the class of boolean functions that can be modeled • If the data-points are real vectors we talk about the decision boundary that the classifier can model

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